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Ace Hardware | $29.99 |
Product Name: | SHOCKWAVE Carbide Hammer Drill Bit Kit (7-Piece) |
Product Description: | The Milwaukee 7-Piece SHOCKWAVE Carbide Hammer Drill Bit Kit uses sharpened carbide to deliver up to 5x longer life in concrete and up to 2x faster drilling into masonry materials. Engineered with a precision ground tip, these bits deliver faster starts and less walking in concrete, brick and block. The wide flutes allow for fast dust removal. Equipped with a 1/4 in. Hex Shank, Milwaukee SHOCKWAVE Carbide Hammer Drill Bits are the ideal solution for drilling in masonry materials with both impacts and hammer drills/drivers. This drill bit kit includes one 5/32 in., two 3/16 in., two 1/4 in., one 5/16 in. and one 3/8 in. hammer drill bits. Durable carbide tip for longer life in concrete and hard aggregate Sharpened carbide edges for faster starts in concrete, brick and block Precision ground carbide tip for less bit walking Wide flute design removes dust faster reducing heat and delivering more holes per charge Ideal for concrete, brick and block 1/4 in. hex shank for added tool versatility Kit includes one 5/32 in. two 3/16 in. two 1/4 in., one 5/16 in., one 3/8 in. Shop All Milwaukee Tools |
Product SKU: | 313694151 |
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Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank goodness97
These are masonry bits. Allowing you to drill a pilot hole in the concrete for an anchor or concrete screw. Hope that helps.
You could also use a powder actuated nail gun (they use .22cal shells to shoot the nail into the concrete).
You could also use a powder actuated nail gun (they use .22cal shells to shoot the nail into the concrete).
If you ever have a chance to use the stud driver with the .22 powder charges, do it. Amazing fun. But wear ear plugs. Otherwise, yeah this'll work too.
Maybe. These would be for what they call a hammer drill which looks like a regular gel it's got a little bit of an impulsive action in it to help you know the bit go through harder material.
but when I tried to drill in the basement concrete wall I could only maybe get half the holes complete I had to go out and buy a rotary drill a rotary drill would be guaranteed to put the holes in the in the concrete that you need but they take a completely different kind of bit.
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You could... but you're going to hate doing it. Find a deal on an SDS and save 2 hours of your life.
SDS drills are seriously on another level if you're doing anything in concrete.